Effect of cerebellar stimulation on postural control and associated resting-state functional alterations in chronic ankle instability
Shanshan Zheng, Yushi Chen, Zikun Wang, Yuwen Zhang, Yiran Wang, Le Yu, Weichu Tao, Qianru Li, Yang Sun, Tsz Yuen Frank Wang, Xiao'ao Xue, He Wang, Yinghui Hua

TL;DR
A single session of cerebellar tDCS improves postural control in people with chronic ankle instability and is linked to changes in cerebellar activity.
Contribution
This study shows that cerebellar tDCS can rapidly alter postural control in chronic ankle instability patients.
Findings
tDCS reduced mediolateral center-of-pressure sway (p = 0.020, Cohen's d = -0.963).
tDCS-induced postural improvements correlated with increased cerebellar coherence (r = -0.709, p = 0.018).
Clinic-based BESS outcomes did not detect significant tDCS effects.
Abstract
Cerebellar maladaptive plasticity underlies postural deficits in chronic ankle instability (CAI), and we tested whether cerebellar-targeted transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can provide a rapid, mechanism-specific postural benefit. Would a single cerebellar tDCS session yield immediate improvements in postural control along with associated alterations in cerebellar activity? In this randomized, sham-controlled laboratory study, 22 participants with CAI received active or sham cerebellar tDCS (20 min). Pre- and post-intervention assessments included: (1) laboratory-based center-of-pressure (CoP) sway during single-leg stance and clinic-based Balance Error Scoring System (BESS); (2) cerebellar regional homogeneity and amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations on resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging. The tDCS group showed a significant reduction in the CoP…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVestibular and auditory disorders · Balance, Gait, and Falls Prevention · Foot and Ankle Surgery
